Kris Jenner to test new talk show

Jan. 30, 2013 05:44 PMUSA Today

Famous momager of the Kardashian clanKris Jenner will be showing off her skills in a new arena this summer.

Fox Television Stations and Twentieth Television will premiere a preview of "Kris," for several weeks, with Jenner serving as an executive producer. The program will be available on select Fox-owned stations in markets including New York and Los Angeles.

"Kris" will be a daily, one-hour entertainment talk show and promises to offer viewers "a daily jolt of celebrity guests, fashion and beauty trends; plus a mix of lifestyle topics -- all through the distinctive and unpredictable perspective of Kris Jenner." It will be filmed in Los Angeles.

Bieber managing split

Billboard is debuting the new Justin Bieber acoustic song, "Nothing Like Us," and asks the teen heartthrob about it not being an angry song but one filled with emotion -- about his breakup with Selena Gomez.

"Because at the end of the day, there's nothing like us, you know?" says the pop star. "That's just it. It is what it is. People are going to relate to that."

So, he's pretty heartbroken?

"I'm not in the happiest place that I've ever been," Bieber admits. "I'm trying to get through what I'm going through. Like I said, I have my really close friends to cheer me up and keep me going."

'Girls' star on sex scenes

Allison Williams, one of the stars of HBO's "Girls," chatted with Chelsea Handler on "Chelsea Lately" and they discussed the sex scenes in the show.

"You had sex with a gay man a couple weeks ago on the show," Handler said.

"I did," Williams confirmed.

"That's weird. And it would be weirder to watch with your dad," who is the "super cool" NBC newsman Brian Williams, Handler said.

"Which I did," Williams said.

She went on to say that she has watched every sex scene she's had so far on the show with her entire family.

When asked how that went, her reply was, "People are vomiting in their chairs."

She explained that she gets her family through those scenes by preparing them for what's about to come and taking them through the scenes in a technical way.